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TulaneClear Bird Song Audio

something has gone horribly wrong 8-p
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Noise, whether from the city or nature, may be enough of a nuisance to convince birds to change their tune over time, according to a new study co-authored by a Tulane University researcher.

Like fuzzy reception on a cell phone, some birds' songs become distorted when broadcast through vegetation or over loud noises in the city. âIf you're a bird trying to learn a new song, which do you copy â the clear one or the fuzzy one?â asked Elizabeth Derryberry, assistant professor of evolutionary ecology at Tulane.

She and Duke University researchers Susan Peters and Steve Nowicki studied how baby swamp sparrows learned to memorize songs. They raised nestlings in a soundproof room, playing 16 recorded song types from adult males. Eight songs were degraded, or noisy, while the rest were clean copies of similar-sounding, but different songs. When the birds matured, they only sang the clear songs. Over time, these choices could lead to cultural selection that changes the way birds sing in response to changes in habitat and urban noise, Derryberry said.

âThere has been a lot of different research that shows that birdsâ songs vary with different habitats, but we didnât know how songs evolved in response to the selection pressure from the environment,â Derryberry said. âThis study is the first to show how that may take place.â

The broad implications are that noise from people in the city can lead to changes in the songs birds sing, she said.

The results were published online Wednesday in the journal Biology Letters.


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Artist/Composer: Tulane
Keywords: j model; undegraded; tulane; duke; bird; song

Creative Commons license: CC0 1.0 Universal


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Model J undegraded 76.0 KB
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JModelUndegraded.ffp Flac FingerPrint 55.0 B
JModelUndegraded.md5 Checksums 56.0 B
JModelUndegraded_files.xml Metadata [file]
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